“We're twins, aren't we, Sweetie?
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You have to pull through!”
Sweetie didn't say anything.
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Sweetie didn't move.
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Diane expected to find blood on her clothes, the way she had that night, but there wasn't any.
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She was still wearing the gaudy bra/panties/garter belt outfit and was drawing a great number of stares from other hospital visitors.
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“Here, I brought you something,” Belgrad said, handing her a bag from the hospital gift shop.
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Inside was a large, white knee-length T-shirt decorated with candy canes.
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It was meant to be a sleep-shirt.
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“Oh, thank you,” Diane said.
Â
“You'd think I was sitting here naked from the way people are ogling me.”
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She slipped it on and covered herself, feeling immensely less vulnerable.
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“Any word?”
“Not yet.”
Belgrad looked at his watch but didn't mention how late it was.
Â
He could see that Diane was terribly upset and it reminded him of his own personal baggage.
Â
Like him, the woman had a past that had exacted a price from her, both spiritually and emotionally.
Â
He knew this was so, simply by looking into her eyes.
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She was damaged and he empathized with the destruction he saw.
Â
He had gone through analysis for years and at the very least he understood why the demons of his own history fueled what he did for a living today.
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He worked on the edge of danger and death because that's what it took to confront the devils and face his fears.
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He wondered if Diane understood it, too.
Â
His gut feeling told him that she didn't have a clue.
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It was too bad that he found her damnably attractive.
Â
Or was it?
A man wearing a white coat emerged from the swinging doors, looked around, and focused on them.
Â
He came over and asked, “Mr. and Mrs. Boston?”
“I'm Mrs. Boston,” Diane said.
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“I'm Doctor Crane,” the man said.
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He was probably in his late thirties, good-looking, fit.
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He sat in a chair beside them.
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“David is fine,” he said.
“Oh, thank God,” Diane muttered.
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She put a hand to her mouth and the tears flowed.
The doctor held up his hand and warned, “But he's not out of the woods.
Â
To tell the truth he's had a terrible strain on his heart.
Â
The aortic regurgitation that he's experienced in the past is much worse.
Â
We've got him on oxygen and a sedative, and he's going to need rest.
Â
I'd like him to stay in the hospital for at least twenty-four to forty-eight hours so we can observe him.
Â
I don't think there're going to be any problems but I want to make sure.
Â
Cardiac arrest is a distinct possibility with Marfan syndrome, but I suspect you know that.”
She nodded and took a tissue from her purse to wipe her face.
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“I understand you're not residents of California?” the doctor asked.
“That's right.”
“Then I suggest as soon as you get home that he see his doctor.
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I think the time has come for him to have that aortic valve repaired.
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You'll find he'll be able to live a much fuller life once that's done.”
“Thank you, doctor.
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Can I see him?”
“Sure.
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Try not to excite him.
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I've already told him that he'll be here overnight and possibly tomorrow night.”
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Belgrad said to her, “You go on.
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I'll wait here.”
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Diane stood and went with the doctor back into the treatment area.
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David was lying with an IV in his arm and an oxygen mask on his face.
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His eyes were open and they brightened when he saw her.
“Honey, how do you feel?” she asked, putting a hand on his forehead.
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“Okay,” he said through the mask.
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“You're going to have to stay here a while, is that all right?”
He nodded.
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“I'll bet you're exhausted.
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Get some sleep.
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I'm probably gonna go to a hotel and I'll be back to see you tomorrow.
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Okay?”
He nodded again.
“Don't worry about those awful men.
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They don't know you're here.
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You'll be safe.
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And our new friend Nick will be watching out for us.”
David nodded once more.
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She leaned over to kiss his forehead.
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“I'm glad you're okay.
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We're gonna get through this.
Â
And I want to say, well, I want to tell you that I'm sorry this has happened.
Â
It should never have involved you.”
Tears welled in his eyes.
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“And I'm sorry about your father,” she continued.
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“You know it wasn't me that did that, don't you?”
He nodded as a drop rolled down his cheek.
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She kissed him again.
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“I love you.
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Feel better.
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I'll see you tomorrow.”
Belgrad gave her a comforting hug when she returned to the waiting room.
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“Thank you,” she said.
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“For everything.”
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“Do you have a place to stay?” he asked.
She shook her head.
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“I was staying with Eric.
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Where do you suppose they took him?”
“I don't know.
Â
We really should try to find him.”
Diane got an idea.
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“The warehouse.
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They probably took him there.”
“The one in Santa Monica?”
“Yes.
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If it's still there.”
Belgrad said, “His company's warehouse is still there, all right.
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I did a lot of checking up on Valentine before I came out here.
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Let's go take a look.”
I'
m in the hospital in Los Angeles.
Â
I asked the nurse for a piece of paper to write on because I don't have my journal with me.
Â
Mom's got it in Nick's car.
Â
He helped us and he seems like a good guy.
Â
I'm really tired and I'm going to sleep in a minute but I wanted to write down some thoughts before I forget them.
Mom came and rescued me from Aaron Valentine's mansion.
Â
I got very sick and something bad happened to my heart.
Â
I might need an operation soon.
Â
Despite all that, this has got to be the most exciting day of my life.
Â
Mom was incredible.
Â
She was like some kind of superhero.
Â
I couldn't believe that she climbed down that thing outside the window at Valentine's house.
Â
And then she whacked Emo and those other guys with that umbrella and they fell into the swimming pool.
Â
I was really out of it but when we were in the car being chased on the freeway, it was right out of a movie.
Â
I remember some of it.
Â
I think Mom fired a gun.
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She's really brave and I'm proud of her.
I don't care if she was a porno actress.
Â
She's the best Mom in the world.
T
hey stopped by Gilliam's house in Van Nuys just to make sure he hadn't escaped from his captors and gone home.
Â
Diane got her hopes up when she saw the Porsche in the driveway beside her Malibu.
Â
She let herself in with the key he had given her, but as she feared, found no one at home.
Â
How did the car get there?
Â
While pondering that puzzle, she took the opportunity to change into blue jeans and a blouse and then rejoined Belgrad in the Lexus.
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“I take it he wasn't there?” Belgrad asked as they drove away.
“No.
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How did his Porsche get here?”
“I imagine they brought it here.
Â
If anything happens to Mister Gilliam then they can claim he left the party.”
Belgrad pulled into a gas station a few blocks away from Gilliam's house.
“Are we out of gas?” Diane asked.
Â
“No, there's something I need to do,” he answered.
Â
He popped the trunk, got out of the Lexus, and took a moment to examine the scrapes and scratches the car had sustained during the chase.
Â
He shrugged and then went around to the rear of the vehicle.
Â
Diane got out and joined him as he removed a five-gallon plastic container for gasoline.
Â
She noticed that there was also a crate of empty Coke bottles and a pile of rags.
“What's all that?”
“For emergencies,” he said, winking at her.
Â
He swiped his credit card in the gas pump and began to fill the container.
Â
Diane, puzzled, picked up one of the empty bottles.
Â
“I don't understand,” she said.
“You will later.”
Â
He topped off the container, sealed it, and placed it back in the trunk.
Â
“Ready to go?” he asked.
They got in the car and took off for Santa Monica.
D
arren Marshall had to drive the thirty-five miles back to Midland to check into a hotel.
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Garden City was such a wasteland that there weren't any commercial hotels in sight.
Â
He had spent the rest of the day in Glasscock County attempting to track down Manuel Delgado, the man the librarian had told him about.
Â
There was no phone number listed in the tiny Garden City directory, so Marshall obtained a rough sketch of the surrounding areas from the woman and an approximate location of the Barnett ranch.
Â
A barbed wire fence lined Highway 33 North and there was supposed to be a break in it “seven or eight miles” from the center of town, where a cattle guard and a dirt road jutted off to the left.
Â
Marshall drove ten miles on the highway but never found the turnoff she mentioned.
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Since the sun had set and visibility was nil, Marshall figured he might have better luck during daylight hours.
Â
He was beginning to wonder if he was on a wild goose chase.
“Y
ou think David will be all right?” Diane asked.
“Sure.
Â
He's in good hands,” Belgrad replied.
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“Has he ever been in the hospital before?”
“Yeah.
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He doesn't like it much.”
“Who does?
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But he knows the ropes.
Â
He'll be fine.”
“I hope so.
Â
I'm worried.”
They drove into Santa Monica and headed west, closer to the ocean.
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“Have you thought about what you're going to do back in Illinois?” he asked after a few minutes of silence.
“What do you mean?”
“Well, I mean eventually you're going to have to go back and face the music.
Â
You're wanted for murder, you know.”